A Few Chuckles & Graphic Military Spending

These first two graphics come courtesy of The Strategist. I don’t know if this first one is intended for civilians or for military training. Let us hope it is not part of ACOTA or IMET ;)

US Air Force Aircraft Identification Chart

These first two are not new, but I got a chuckle out of them. Right now I’m working hard on some farming projects, with not much time to write. The need for this next one is obvious. Click on any of the graphics in this post to see the larger version.

Journalist's Guide To Firearms Identification

The following are not intentionally humorous. They come via The Strategist and Information is Beautiful, and come originally from The Guardian DataBlog. The following graphics are by David McCandless. If you go to the originals at The Guardian DataBlog there is some commentary, but I prefer to present them without commentary. As someone once said to me when I was trying to get a specific political opinion from them: patriots may draw their own conclusions.

Who really spends the most on their armed forces?

Which country has the biggest military budget per year?

——–

The US military budget in context

——–

GDPs of major nations as combined earnings of US states

——–

Big spenders, yearly military budget as % of GDP

——–

Active forces - who has the most soldiers?

——–

Active forces - the number of soldiers per 100,000 people

——–

Total armed forces - the number of soldiers, reservists, and paramilitary per 100,000 people